Not every court decision can be held out as one that either protects or chips away at the foundation of the practice of law.

But those are the themes being bounced back and forth after an April 14 ruling by the Indiana Supreme Court about estate
planning services and the unauthorized practice of law.

One side says the court has reinforced that non-attorneys aren't allowed to give anything that resembles legal advice
and if they do, the penalties can be sharp. Meanwhile, the company found to have engaged in UPL and hit with a disgorgement
order says the decision will harm consumers and make it more difficult for people to maneuver the legal issues involved in
estate planning.

Ruling per curiam, justices issued a significant UPL decision in State of Indiana, Ex. Rel. Indiana State Bar Association
v. United Financial Systems Corp., No. 84S00-0810-MS-551. The court heard oral arguments in December, and by all accounts
the ISBA won this UPL action against Indianapolis-based estate-planning services company, United Financial Systems Corp.

In October 2008, ISBA filed the action against United Financial Systems and accused it of operating a trust mill operation
that engaged in unauthorized practice of law and wrongly collected more than a $1 million from at least five families throughout
the state. The company argued that it hadn't been engaged in UPL, and that it's made changes in recent years to correct
whatever activity might have been interpreted that way.

Justices named Senior Judge Bruce Embrey from Miami Superior Court as a special commissioner on the case. After a hearing
last year, he issued a report with 266 findings last summer for the high court's review. Justices heard arguments in December,
ultimately taking the matter under advisement for about four months before its recent decision against United Financial Systems.

"We are convinced, however, that UFSC's business model has marginalized the attorney's role to such a degree
as to cross the line of permissible practices," the court wrote. "We are also convinced that the changes UFSC indicates
it has made to its business model in Indiana since the filing of the verified petition are cosmetic at best and are not remotely
sufficient to prevent its business model from running afoul of the prohibition against the unauthorized practice of law."

Justices ordered the Indianapolis-based company to stop engaging in any conduct that might be considered UPL, and that the
company should have been on notice about the unauthorized nature of its conduct after a previous ruling in 2006. The justices
also ruled that the ISBA is entitled to certain statutory attorney fees and that disgorgement of the fees United Financial
Services received because of its UPL should be returned.

Deciding on relief, the court relied on its past decision in State ex rel Indiana State Bar Ass'n v. Northouse,
848 N.E.2d 668 (Ind. 2006), that addressed the issue of disgorgement - or returning the ill-gotten fees.

"Notwithstanding the potential availability of other civil remedies, we believe the disgorgement or a similar form of
restitutionary remedy serves as a more reliable and effective deterrent against the unauthorized practice of law," the
court wrote. "Persons or companies should be deterred from the unauthorized practice of law irrespective of the actual
harm their conduct may cause, and the fact that some of the persons who have purchased estate plans from UFSC may have received
a product adequate for their needs does not alter the illegality of UFSC's conduct."

By order, the company must notify all of its Indiana estate plan customers since 1995, as well as those since the Northouse
ruling in 2006 about possibly receiving money back.

The justices also found against the ISBA in its argument that Administrative Disciplinary Rule 24 should be expanded to include
attorneys fees for the "costs and expenses," finding that Indiana Code 34-52-1-1 permits an award of attorney fees
in civil actions that occur because of the claims.

The ISBA may get a portion of the $19,500 it spent on attorney fees directly stemming from United Financial Systems'
claims about past and current settlements, but that is up to Judge Embrey to determine on remand. The commissioner will also
determine what amount the ISBA should get from the $11,093 in costs for ISBA's counsel for copying, phone calls, and other
routinely billed legal expenses as well as from the $25,882 the ISBA paid directly to various vendors for copies and transcripts,
as well costs to an attorney who rebutted United Financial's expert about the legitimacy of its business model.

All of the justices agreed, except Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard noted that he would have granted ISBA's request for
fees incurred in this prosecution.

Most of the financial aspects of the case return to Judge Embrey to decide, and attorneys say he hasn't yet set any hearings
on those issues.

"This opinion makes it crystal clear what the court's view is on non-lawyer's engaging in that practice of writing
wills and trusts, that people may not legally understand," McGoff said.

He noted the disgorgement decision is significant but it's also worthwhile to note how the company's principals were
also held personally responsible - he doesn't recall seeing that before.

While the ISBA did lose on its Rule 24 argument about attorney fees being included in "costs and expenses," McGoff
said it's difficult to be too disappointed in that aspect.

"The point of the suit was to stop them from engaging in UPL, and now there's a very clear directive that this is
prohibited," he said. "We have a bright-line rule, and that's very significant because of the belief that it's
part of the bar's obligation is to protect the sanctity of our legal profession from those who might be performing UPL."

Indianapolis attorney Ronald Elberger with Bose McKinney & Evans, who represented United Financial Systems, declined
to offer any legal analysis or comment about the significance of the court's decision outside this case. Instead, he deferred
to a written statement offered by the company a week after the ruling.

Mostly, the statement criticized the justices' and Judge Embrey's handling of the case and denied that any UPL activity
had occurred. The statement defended its conduct and noted that it never prepared legal documents, and that it repeatedly
informed customers it wasn't a law firm and that it wasn't providing legal advice. United Financial Systems said the
case stems from a longstanding effort to root competitors from the marketplace because they offer more affordable estate-planning
services.

"The decision, supposedly designed to protect the state's consumers, actually reduces their choices for estate planning,
and increases the cost of these services," the company statement says. "The ripple effects of this decision stand
to be felt across the marketplace in Indiana. Any non-lawyer, whether an insurance agent or agency, investment adviser, educational
institution or philanthropic entity, may stand accused of practicing law without a license if the lawyer to whom they hand
over that client or donor ultimately charges a fee the Bar Association feels is too low."

Describing the ruling as a regrettable "defeat for the interest of Indiana's working families," the company's
statement adds: "Indiana's consumers are now left with even fewer helping hands in navigating the often intimidating
and expensive world of legal services. Many will likely find the prospect of retaining an estate planning attorney impossible,
either because the process is too unnerving or because they are simply priced out of the market."

Hoosier estate planning attorneys discount that claim about fewer options, saying the state has certified that area as a
specialty in recent years and that pretty much every bar association has referral networks for attorneys to help in those
complicated areas of the law.

"I find it hard to believe that there's a lack of knowledge in the marketplace, or that there's a real problem
with people being able to obtain this type of legal service," said Indianapolis attorney Bill Pope, who leads the estate
planning group at Barnes & Thornburg. "It's a matter of safeguarding the public, and there's no justification
for having unlicensed lay people out recommending these legal estate plans. If this hadn't been discovered, it would have
been disastrous for even more people."

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Michael Hoskins joined Indiana Lawyer in May 2006 and mostly covers the state and federal court systems. He’s received awards from the Indiana Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists for his work covering the state's juvenile justice system, the federal immigration court system, wrongful conviction issues, and long-running lawsuits regarding prison conditions.

He came from the Daily Journal in Johnson County, where he was a general assignment reporter covering courts and legal issues. Before moving to Indiana in 2004 from southeast Michigan, Hoskins freelanced for the Detroit Free Press and worked for the Spinal Column Newsweekly after graduating with a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Oakland University in 2001. He currently lives in Greenwood with his wife, Susanne, and volunteers with the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.